vote up 0 vote down star

I've got a very large image which I'd like to use for sprite techniques (à la css image sprites).

I've got the code below:

<Image x:Name="testImage" Width="24" Height="12" Source="../Resources/Images/sprites.png">
     <Image.Clip>
         <RectangleGeometry Rect="258,10632,24,12" />
     </Image.Clip>
</Image>

This clips the source image to 24x12 at the relative position of 258, 10632 in the source image.

The problem is that I want the cropped image to show at 0,0 in the testImage whereas it shows it at 258, 10632. It's using the geometry as a cutting guide but also as a layout guide.

Anyone have any idea how this should be done? if at all.

Conclusion: There seems to be no good way of doing this at present, Graeme's solution seems to be the closest to achieving this with Silverlight 2.0.

That said, if anyone knows of a better way of doing this, please reply with an answer.

flag

4 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

Assuming you're on a canvas

<Image x:Name="testImage" Width="24" Height="12" Canvas.Left="-258" Canvas.Top="-10632" Source="../Resources/Images/sprites.png">
 <Image.Clip>
     <RectangleGeometry Rect="258,10632,24,12" />
 </Image.Clip>

With WPF you would use a CroppedBitmap but unfortunately that doesn't exist in Silverlight.

< Edit >

With further experimentation a solution without using a canvas:

<Image x:Name="testImage" Width="24" Height="12" Source="../Resources/Images/sprites.png">
    <Image.Clip>
        <RectangleGeometry Rect="258,10632,24,12" />
    </Image.Clip>
    <Image.RenderTransform>
        <TranslateTransform X="-258" Y="10632"/>
    </Image.RenderTransform>
</Image>

It's doing the same thing as the canvas just slightly neater.

link|flag
I like where you're going here but changing the image width to 24 hides the content. Changing the width at all changes which bit of the original image is being shown. – TreeUK Apr 15 at 21:08
I could leave the width and height as the original Width="800" Height="18928" but is that the RIGHT way to be doing it? – TreeUK Apr 15 at 21:10
The problem is that Silverlight doesn't yet support what you're trying to do. CroppedBitmap is the RIGHT way, but unfortunately only exists in WPF. So unless you break open Reflector and implement it yourself you're left with the limitation of Image – Graeme Bradbury Apr 16 at 8:05
So, this is currently the only way of doing it at the moment.. Rubbish! I guess I'll have to look to the Silverlight 3 managed bitmap API for hope. – TreeUK Apr 16 at 10:50
vote up 1 vote down

The Bitmap API of Silverlight 3.0 will allow you to grap a clip from your sprite image.

See this post on How to crop instead of clip in silverlight

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Why do this at all, the whole point of css image sprites is to improve download time by making one request instead of many. But you can achieve the same by just putting all your images in a xap (or THE xap) and download them in one request.

link|flag
The issue I perceive is more the loading of a multitude of images rather than using a single image that hopefully Silverlight will internally optimise the performance of. – TreeUK Apr 18 at 18:19
I would bet that you're actually going to get higher memory usage and worse performance doing that. Unless you actually have a proven bottleneck AND measurements showing this "optimization" can improve things (which sounds like no on both counts) then you are wasting your time AND decreasing the quality of whatever it is you're working on. – Eloff May 29 at 12:46
vote up 0 vote down check

It turns out this can be done.

<Rectangle x:Name="myRect" Width="28" Height="12" />

ImageBrush imageBrush = new ImageBrush();
imageBrush.ImageSource = //Load in image source
imageBrush.Stretch = Stretch.None;
imageBrush.AlignmentX = AlignmentX.Left;
imageBrush.AlignmentY = AlignmentY.Top;

TranslateTransform offsetTransform = new TranslateTransform();
offsetTransform.X = -258;
offsetTransform.Y = -10632;

imageBrush.Transform = offsetTransform;
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.